โApr-28-2015 09:58 PM
โApr-30-2015 05:31 PM
Wishbone51 wrote:NRALIFR wrote:
Oh, and BTW..........guess what those aluminum boat owners use to prevent their expensive boats from corroding? Magnesium anodes!
Hahaha.. Where do they put the anode? dangling in the water? ๐
โApr-30-2015 05:00 PM
NRALIFR wrote:
Oh, and BTW..........guess what those aluminum boat owners use to prevent their expensive boats from corroding? Magnesium anodes!
โApr-30-2015 04:04 PM
โApr-30-2015 03:54 PM
โApr-30-2015 03:38 PM
Wishbone51 wrote:
.. Atwood.. "No anode required" .. what they do different to not require an anode? Maybe a better coating?
โApr-30-2015 03:32 PM
โApr-30-2015 02:25 PM
ernie1 wrote:
Old Biscuit: Do your residential water heaters only last 6 or 7 years? Man! My water heaters always last 15-20 years. Hmmmm, must be the water.
โApr-30-2015 02:06 PM
โApr-30-2015 10:21 AM
SoundGuy wrote:Old-Biscuit wrote:
The idea is for the rod to be 'sacrificial' vs the steel tank of water heater.
Sacrificial yes, but the anode rod is not protecting the steel tank per se as that tank is lined with porcelain ... rather, in Suburban's words the purpose of using an anode rod in one of their water heater tanks is because "Heated water attacks all metals, but not porcelain. That's why Suburban uses a porcelain-lined, steel water heater tank with an anode rod to "absorb" the electrolytical action".
โApr-30-2015 05:36 AM
Old-Biscuit wrote:
The idea is for the rod to be 'sacrificial' vs the steel tank of water heater.
โApr-29-2015 10:30 PM
โApr-29-2015 09:50 PM
โApr-29-2015 09:47 PM
โApr-29-2015 04:52 PM
hawkeye-08 wrote:
Wonder how many of you check and change the anode rod in your home water heater?